Friday, October 30, 2009
Understanding Web Fonts: book proposal
Comments on this proposal appreciated.
Synopsis
This short book will offer a guide to anyone who wants to understand and implement web fonts. Its practical section will concentrate on WOFF fonts which seem overwhelmingly likely to offer the most future-aware and ideology-free format. The goal will be to give web designers and developers a clear understanding of the new technology, so they know when and how to implement it.
The Project
I would like to invite collaborators and contributors personally, but anyone who wants to contribute is welcome to contact me as project originator so we can compare notes.
The text will be written online, although see http://www.socialbysocial.com/book/creation-social-by-social
It will be published under GNU Free Documentation License, v1.3 or later, and the copyright will be held by ‘Contributors to the Webfonts book’.
A commercial publishing agreement will be sought. This would be comparable to the agreements for books like Version control with Subversion and Pro Git. If the book is published commercially then any royalties will be distributed between contributors involved in each static release (== print edition). http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
To set the topic in context it will give in about 10,000 words
- an outline of the history of the technology
- an explanation of advantages, both perceived and real
- a guide to the history of typeface publishing, to explain where the special problems come from
- a concise set of use cases for web fonts:
- graphic design and branding considerations (the major commercial drivers)
- academic research into ancient languages and transliterated documents that use obsolete characters
- minority languages (those poorly supported by operating systems: the Indian subcontinent, for example)
The main text of the book, which is at a first guess estimated at 15,000 words or so, would provide
- technical info about the preferred format, WOFF, as a set of references to, and elaboration of, documentation emerging online (eg the Kew/Leming/van Blokland WOFF spec, the W3C Web Fonts group charter and Candidate Recommendation pages)
- howtos for authors wanting to
- use cloud font services like Typekit
- make WOFF fonts, including advice on subsetting for lower bandwidth/faster rendering
- host web fonts
- create style rules that encompass the widest range of user agents
- understand their legal rights and obligations when using commercial web fonts
Then, as it is very early days, we may speculate briefly on what will happen in the future in about 5,000 words:
- impact on the web
- impact on the font publishing world
- Fine typography in user agents, eg the Mozilla demo by Jonathan Kew. http://bit.ly/3sXGLh
- an opportunity for free/libre fonts?
References
Documentation
Demos
Discussions
- www-font mailing list archive http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-font/
EOT Lite [CWT], Mozilla et al
Discussion/analysis: oldish but set context
- http://shiflett.org/blog/2008/oct
- http://jontangerine.com/log/2008/10/font-face-in-ie-making-web-fonts-work
- http://jontangerine.com/log/2009/03/skillswap-goes-typographic
Edit: corrected heading hierarchy
Labels: typography, web fonts, WOFF, writing
